@mikeazo i am able to get the value by using the openssl tool..i guess the question should be 'what is the format of the RSA private key'
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sharatJul 31 '14 at 18:18

Also, this doesn't directly relate to your question, but the above key is a 512 bit RSA key. Keys of that size have been broken, it is generally recognized that everyone needs at least 1024 bit keys (with 2048 bits being highly recommended). I'm pointing this out in case this is the key size you were intending to use. OpenSSL will be glad to generate larger keys, if you ask it to.
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ponchoJul 31 '14 at 18:32

1 Answer
1

That is an RSA private key with a PEM encoding. I believe the PEM encoding is from RFC 1421. After the PEM encoding is peeled off, there's an ASN.1/DER encoded RSA private key. The ASN.1 encoding is binary, so its not human readable. The format for the ASN.1 key can be found in PKCS #1 or RFC 3447.

According to RFC 3447, Section A.1.2 RSA Private Key Syntax, here's what you can expect: